lll'tsPMwttavv "" ;!'! '"f 'iii'i.ni j -t - -":w. ;'i n if'ijl. in..'.,. "'"'" fit,- W - . j-. ,- -- hi, 1 . 35 M oR THE DAILY NEBRASKAN 648 MEN'S WINTER HATS 3.00 AND $ 2.00 VALUES PRICED FOR THIS SALE AJ" $ SEE THE 0 STREET WINDOW DISPLAY .oo I Each ON SALE SATURDAY MORNING All Hats are 1913 14 Fall and Winter Merchandise. 480 $3Roelof "Smile" Derbies 84 $3 Roelof "Smile"Soft Hats 60 $2 Tweed Soft Hats 24 $2 Soft Felt Hats Nearly All of the Desirable Colors Are Represented. ROELOF HATS are standard. They are known and respected the world over. Roelof Hats, bearing the name Henry H. Roelof are never on sale for less than $3.00. Consequently to make this radical price reduction we had to get the Roelof Hats without the maker's name. BUT THEY ARE THE GENUINE "SMILE" HATS. THE TWEED AND SOFT HATS ARE ALL IN CORRECT SHAPES AND COLORINGS OUR REASON for such a hat sale at this time of the year is WE MUST EFFECT A QUICK CLEARANCE OF ALL OUR WINTER MERCHANDISE TO HAVE ROOM FOR OUR NEW SPRING STETSONS. This sale is an opportunity worth grasping. Many men will want both a Derby and a Soft Hot SO WE WILL NOT RESTRICT PURCHASES. RUDGE & GUENZEL COMPANY Junior Prom Not to Be Combined-Tickets In Hands of Committee Tin Junior Prom which lb to he hold January HOth, will not ho coin binod with the Senior Prom and tick ets are now on sale. The matter of combination tailed to meet with the approval of the committee and the juniorH are going ahead with plans to make the prom a real "prom" that is, something better than full dress and tancy programs The junior class debt lias been paid in full, leaving the class free to go ahead with their so( ml activities, and Chairman Hau man is running on "high" in his plans for the dance Tickets are in the hands of a num ber of juniors, and the word has gone out that they should be arranged for at once, as they will bo taken off .sale several days before the dance. In order that tho number coming may be known to tho committee, it is stated that after the tickets are off sale, absolutely no more will bo sold. Tickets may bo obtained from any of the following: D. D Mapes, J. Grimlson, M Rourbough, R. Swift. G. E. Heed, O. Zumwinkel, K M. Snydor, and W. II. Bauman. WEATHER DESTROYS SOME POPULAR FANCIES Director Loveland of Local Weather Bureau Denies That Cultivation Increases Rain-fall. Sophs Should Wear Caps Sophomores don't forget that those caps are here and they can be ob tained at the Omaha Hat Co., 1234 O st. These caps are the latest thing in headgear and should bo worn by all loyal Sophs The caps are not expen sive in comparison to other headgears and are sorvicable for the wearer as well as being the distinguishing thing that tho committee desired when they made the selection. Got In line, Sophomores and get a cap. Director Loveland of tho weather bureau and his associates are onfimed destroyers of illusions and popular fancies about the weather. One of the most persistent fallacies which this corps of squelchers has been called upon to attack is the belief that the settlement of a country and the consequent tilling of the soil produced an increase in precipitation. Mr. Loveland points to the fact that the weather records which have been kept in Nebraska for the last sixty years show that the precipitation has not increased with the coining of set tlers. The explanation that the tilled ground absorbs the moisture which Is precipitated and the crops seem to he receiving more moisture by virtue of that fact. The fact that the rain fall is absorbed results in a decreased visible supply of moisture on top of the ground. In the local weather bureau files are records of rainfall in Nebraska from the year 1849 when the army posts of the state kept an eye on the clouds for tho Information of tho pros pective settlors. In tho pioneer days the settlers knew little of the climate and suspected that tho rainfall might be insufficient for successful agricul ture and so kept careful records until the establishment of government weather bureau relieved them of the necessity for keep their own records and repeated successful crops, re lieved their doubts of the generosity of nature In Nebraska. POINT SETS FASHIONS BY FADDO Jones' Orchestra; Phone L9666. It has always been the torema ambition and the anient desire (.. the ( o-eds of Nebraska, or of an large ( o-educational college for that matter, to be "in stylo." as it wore, to live up to the new creations of fashion, in so far as the standards of propriety will permit thorn. Hut up-to-date fashion, according to Poiret, the infamous Parsian designer, consists of other requirements than merely being properly garbed. It consists, appreciably, in the correct carriage of the body as is becoming to certain gowns. Here is where a casual suggestion might work wond ers in helping the co-eds of Nebraska to achieve this set standard of fash ion, it is this: Poiret announces that those girls and women who clothe themselves in the "slouch" costume, embodying the narrow skirt, (and this is most predominant on the campus), have not yet attained the pinnacle of style accompanying that sort of ap "slouch" walk and are able to make the most effective use of It when thus clad. He then goes on to describe this "walk" by saying that the body should be somewhat limp, the right arm dropped loosely to the side and free to swing, and a sidewlse swaying motion imparted to the whole person as each short step is taken. All this is easy to acquire and then the fash ionable one is truly up-to-date. M CUtuon 2& in. Suford 2 i In. Ajnho2J in. -'' ., - - - . -. ,y w. ir v s v Gliuon 2 la. Suford 23 In. Ajnboy 2i in. m m y I Sl" IF f 1 jiae uver v. r&L ji Kuucunx V9jO' wui ilfc CLOTHING CO. for 25c 7v THA"t XX Students at the University oT Mich igan are making an effort for tho re vival, of their junior hop which was abolished last year, because of ex travagance, freak dances and objec tionable music. The hop was Mich igan's greatest social affair and its loss Is greatly felt by the student body. Ex. A "Square Deal' for everybody is the " Spalding Policy. " We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade Mark, that such an article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1616 Arapahoet. - - Denver, Colo According to a straw vote taken at Minnesota, the students aro in favor of the point system which re quires that students may only engage in activities which aggregate a certain number of points Ex. wf vexmf&aa